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I've not been able to find information about whether non-activated alternates have any legal ability to be informed, but if I had to guess, I'd say probably not. This is a question for an attorney.
That's 'best case'. People get weird when money comes in to play. But you're on the list as a FPOA, so I would assume you should know what #1 POA thinks & does.
My 2 brothers were MPOA and FPOA. The MPOA kept a lot of stuff from the rest of us re: mom's health. The FPOA met with mom once a year to look over the trust and make any small changes. IDK if the brothers ever talked about their different duties. FPOA shared his info with the rest of us, if it was salient. Otherwise, we trusted him.
My DH is POA for his mother, but he is frozen in place, emotionally and wouldn't DO anything that needed to be done, choosing to REACT to events rather than ACT before things got bad.
OB simply stepped in and started running the show. There will be no legal transference of POA, DH will sign off on what he needs to sign and remain as POA, but OB is making the decisions now.